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Everything posted by Larry Kart
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Interesting piece here (translation follows the German original): http://www.katekaiser.com/articles/Jutta_H...ly_2006_new.pdf Note in particular Leonard Feather's attempt to hit on her, after which (Hipp turned him down) he switched from being her fervent backer to putting her down in print. Methinks that this is a pattern that one could run across throughout Mr. Feather's life -- not that he slept with George Shearing, but I'm trying to think of other female artists that Leonard praised and promoted. I vaguely recall an all-female combo that he assembled for a recording but don't remember who was in it.
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Chicago scene alert -- bassist-composer Jason Ajemian's
Larry Kart replied to Larry Kart's topic in Recommendations
I love People, Places and Things the one time I heard them. The concept really worked -- the material is interesting (I'm old enough to have heard some of it the first time around), the heads were played accurately and with passion, and the soloists then were able to do their own things without breaking faith with the material. Ward was inspired. Ajemian is a chance-taker, but I have heard a player on the scene (who admires Ajemian) say, "He can't really play the bass." I didn't quiz him on this but am pretty sure that he meant that Ajemian's musical skill-set is intense and novel but very home-grown and not broad, and if that he's faced with material that's not in his bag, he'd have trouble adjusting. On other hand, I believe (and I think my informant would agree) that if JA were that different along those lines, he might not be the unique, valuable musician he is. Further -- and this is my thought alone -- if my informant's view of JA is accurate, I think it's a tribute to and sign of the nature of this scene that a guy like JA is listened and reacted to by his colleagues with the interest and respect that he deserves. I may be wrong, I can imagine a lot of scenes where that wouldn't be the case. -
Chicago scene alert -- bassist-composer Jason Ajemian's
Larry Kart replied to Larry Kart's topic in Recommendations
More straightahead, lyrical, and swinging for the most part, but Ajemian's inherent spacy (in the best sense) foxiness is omnipresent. The feel factor is just different and probably unique. Again, the liner notes make the nature and quality of the mind that's at work here pretty clear. -
Yes, I was assistant editor at Down Beat (that meant there were two of us on the editorial side, plus a saintly/brilliant production manager Gloria Baldwin) under Dan Morgenstern in 1969-70. I did some writing, a lot of editing and corralling of contributors and their work, plus we laid out the magazine. In many ways it was a dream -- working with Dan was an education in itself, plus he's one of the best, kindest people I know (we've stayed in touch), except that I was making maybe $5,200 a year and after year one the so-called old man, John T. Maher, who had promised me a raise if I didn't screw up, died and was succeeded by his son, Jack, who told me that he knew nothing about his father's promise, and if I didn't like it I could go f--- myself. I replied in kind, and that was that. My predecessor was Bill Quinn; I was followed by Jim Szantor, who later became a friend when we both worked at the Chicago Tribune. Jim was a genius copy editor and a very smart, funny, soulful guy. He also was the world's Number One fan of Sal Nistico. Bill Quinn I didn't know that well except that he moved on to Playboy, where he no doubt was much better paid. His main legacy to me was that a young woman who worked at DB that summer in some quasi-secretarial role was a big pal of his (may in fact have sotto voce been in love with him -- Quinn definitely was a handsome, very well-dressed, cool dude) and as a result so it seemed decided that I, Quinn's replacement, was inherently despicible. (Perhaps Quinn left in part because of friction with the old man about pay or something as well as because he could hook up with Playboy -- I don't know -- and she knew about this and thought that I was a figurative dagger in Quinn's back; or maybe she just despised me on the spot, without any trimmings or back story.) In any case, this young woman (who was fairly attractive) stared daggers of hate at me all summer, which was unnerving, in part because our desks were placed so that every time I looked up she was looking right at me, like the mask of Medusa. Eventually the rather wounding aspects of this were mitigated by my dawning awareness that she was pretty close to nuts; not only did she look like a much prettier version of Louise Lasser, she was maybe five times as neurotic, which is saying something.
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Chicago scene alert -- bassist-composer Jason Ajemian's
Larry Kart replied to Larry Kart's topic in Recommendations
I'm a good guesser; Haldeman is 29: http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fusea...endID=122442377 -
Chicago scene alert -- bassist-composer Jason Ajemian's
Larry Kart posted a topic in Recommendations
--- with tenorman Tim Haldeman, trumpeter Jaimie Branch, guitarist Matt Schneider, Jason Adasiewicz on marimba. Haldeman, one hell of a player, was somehow new to me until about six weeks ago, when I heard him a group led by drummer Mike Reed -- he has hair, teeth, and claws, plus he sounds like an adult, not a kid, though he's probably short of 30. Jaimie is in great, relaxed form, almost Tony Fruscella-like at times; I've long been a fan of the not that often heard, even in terms of number of gigs Schneider, etc. The album was produced by the musicians themselves (in this case a very good thing) and recorded (beautifully) by Tanaka. Ajemian's soulful liner notes are worth a look too. Disclaimer: My only connection with these people is music-based admiration and resulting (in some cases) "Hey, how are you?" acquaintances-friendships. -
Interesting comment I wouldn't have thought of made at the time of the Post article by a woman who successfully plays the musical saw in NYC subway stations and who also has this blog: http://sawlady.com/blog/ The Washington Post published an article about an experiment they did: they got Joshua Bell, one of the best violinists in the world, to play incognito in a subway station. They wanted to see if without the PR he usually gets for his stage performances anybody would stop to listen. The result was - hardly anybody stopped to listen. The Washington Post analyzed it as if it were the fault of the audience, the passers by, for not recognizing such a great musician. I say - it wasn’t the fault of the passers by at all. The thing is Joshua Bell is a great violinist but he doesn’t know how to busk. There are violinists who are not even close to being as good as he is (such as Jim Grasec or Lorenzo LaRock), yet they get crowds to stop and listen to them. It’s because when you play on the street you can’t approach it as if you are playing on a stage. Busking is an art form of its own. You need to be as good a musician as to audition for any stage gig (the competition over permits is fierce) but in addition to that you have to relate to the audience and be a real people’s person. You can’t hide behind your instrument and just play, with an invisible wall between you and the audience, the way a stage performance is conducted. In busking you use the passers by as if they were paint and your music is the paint brush - your goal is to create a collective work of art with the people, in the space, in the moment with you and the music. A busker is someone who can turn any place into a stage. Obviously, Joshua Bell needs an actual stage. As a busker one needs to interact with those around, break walls of personal space, and lure people into a collective and spontaneous group experience on the street, in the moment, with you. A bad busking act is when the performer doesn’t make an effort to connect with the audience. Like musicians who play for themselves, not acknowledging the audience, just burying their heads in their instruments. IMHO that is why Joshua Bell didn’t get lots of people to stop and listen.
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Best opera DVD I've seen no far -- Ariadne auf Naxos
Larry Kart replied to Larry Kart's topic in Classical Discussion
Nice interview with Grist, who is a remarkable person as well as a remarkable singer: http://www.usoperaweb.com/2003/spring/grist.htm -
It's in black and white, Austrian TV broadcast, but the sound is good and the performances and production are ideal. Reri Grist is Zerbinetta, likewise Juranic as The Composer, and Thomas as Bacchus sings his f------ brains out, which is what the role demands. And the work itself probably is the acme of the Strauss-Hofmannstahl collaboration, which is saying something. And Bohm and Vienna Philarmonic!
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Yes they did --- Craft.
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Braxton Arista and Freedom set on Mosaic?
Larry Kart replied to Fer Urbina's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Doesn't Braxton have at least 3,700 present and former students? -
Weingarten's inane (and IIRC journalistically unethical) piece of dung won the Pultizer? Guess that's all you need to know about any such award. If the jurors are a bunch of monkeys...
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American Pop - from Minstrel to Mojo: On Record 1893-1956
Larry Kart replied to Peter's topic in Re-issues
It's a douche and a mouthwash. -
Charlton Heston has passed
Larry Kart replied to clifford_thornton's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
New Trier had a big swimming tradition (won the state title for many years), and in swim class, which everyone had to take, the boys swam in the nude. This may have been common at the time, for reasons of hygiene -- one showered before getting into the Olympic-sized pool, and no swim suits meant there was no issue of cleanliness aside from that of your own scrubbed body -- but I tell you it felt weird. The girls wore awful ill-fitting tank suits, which I'm told left many of them feeling weird/traumatized for slightly different reasons. Speaking of cleanliness, one would-be hell raiser stuffed a Baby Ruth bar up his butt before swim class and then released it from its hiding place while we were all in the pool, where it may have floated. In any case, swim coach Dave Robertson (something of a Donald Rumsfeld type, Rumsfeld being a New Trier grad; he was a star wrestler) almost had a rage-induced heart attack. -
...much more so than by any other Penguin Guide to recordings of any sort, let along by the increasingly vile Gramophone Guides to classical recordings, which are far beyond parody now. I'm not a blues expert by any means, but the apparent savvy and lucidity of the main authors, Tony Russell and Chris Smith, make this a pleasure to read as well as, as far as I can tell from my own tastes and experince, sound in its judgments. Any thoughts?
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Organissimo/Reptet in Traverse City
Larry Kart replied to Free For All's topic in organissimo - The Band Discussion
Oh my God. -
Organissimo/Reptet in Traverse City
Larry Kart replied to Free For All's topic in organissimo - The Band Discussion
In my admittedly limited experience, I've never see a bunny tail (a smallish one) worn with more insousiance. And the charts were excellent. -
By "too flat" do you mean "too dull, or boring", or are you talking about problems of pitch? If the latter, I have no complaint about Jackie, but always find Gigi Gryce too sharp. Any views on this? I mean flat, as far as pitch is concerned. And I don't like his tone that much. I listened to the CD this afternoon, and I can hear that he plays very well, and I appreciate it, but I just don't like his sound. I hear that Gigi Gryce is sharp, sometimes, but since I like his tone and phrasing, I don't mind. It's a personal thing: You like a player's sound and conception, or you don't. As Ornette famously said, "You can play flat in tune and you can play sharp in tune." IMO Jackie usually plays flat in tune, especially on Blue Note; in his Prestige days a bit less so (i.e. less in tune and more just flat), though his sound still moves me.
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I'd Rather Be the Devil--Skip James and the Blues.
Larry Kart replied to Shannon Dickey's topic in Recommendations
He did but IIRC referred to the Rolling Stones as a minstrel act. There was a big difference between the early Rolling Stones and the mature Rolling Stones in that regard. If that was MW's initial reaction to the Stones when they first appeared on the scene, then it is understandable. It was an initial reaction. -
Organissimo/Reptet in Traverse City
Larry Kart replied to Free For All's topic in organissimo - The Band Discussion
Was Samantha wearing her bunny ears and tail? I'm tellin' ya... -
I watched the show after reading your post (I usually tape the show and watch it the next day). It looked to me that the drummer was playing live, at least the few times that I could see him. Maybe it was Larry who was actually on tape. That often is the case. Besides, it was past my bedtime.
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Charlton Heston has passed
Larry Kart replied to clifford_thornton's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
The Dern/Ann-Margret movie was "Middle Age Crazy" (1980): http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0081157/ IIRC they play husband and wife. -
Charlton Heston has passed
Larry Kart replied to clifford_thornton's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Maybe she was one of the ones who made the beefy guys stiff... There's an amusing anecdote about that in Dern's recent (and quite entertaining and utterly unfettered autobiography): http://www.amazon.com/Things-Said-Probably...2110&sr=8-1 He and A-M were doing a simulated sex scene in a film, while her husband Roger Smith hovered just out of camera range. Dern, hard-pressed so to speak to know what do, got between the sheets with his undershorts on; A-M was insulted, saying something like "You're just like all those other snotty New Trier boys!" though eventually they worked it out. A-M's family BTW came from the other side of the tracks, while Dern was a scion of wealth and high social standing; his family on his mother's side founded Carson Pirie Scott department store and owned lots of downtown real estate.